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How your gut can make you seem smarter than you really are

We've all been hungry — or even "hangry" — at one point in our lives, but is there a scientific explanation for this phenomenon? And might there be some hidden value to this otherwise irritating feeling? A new study explores, suggesting that our gut helps us make good decisions and come across as smarter than we really are.

Our gut may function as a kind of "memory" that guides our decision-making, shows new research.

Since the times of Plato, us in the Western world have been taught to think that we're rational beings, far superior to animals, and that our emotions and appetites are, to use Plato's famous allegory, an unruly horse that our virtuous self-needs to keep in check with the help of reason.

But, as the field of cognitive sciences evolves and we learn more and more about our bodies and brains, we find out that nothing could be farther from the truth.

So, while we may like to hold on to our noble narrative and delude ourselves into thinking we're intellectually sophisticated and so much better than our fellow animals, new research brings more evidence to the contrary.

Not only do we share more with animals than we might think, but sensations as basic as hunger drive a lot of our decision making, reveals the new study.

In fact, the research — which was led by scientists at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom — explains that our gut is capable of "storing" memories, and that a feeling of hunger can act as a sort of shortcut for making decisions that appear complex and calculated, but that is, in fact, driven by the proverbial "gut feeling."

The scientists came to this conclusion by using a complex computer model that explored an animal's chances of survival in environments where food availability fluctuates and where predators are lurking around. Their findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

'A cheaper way to make decisions'

The model revealed that if animals base their decisions exclusively on their physiological cues — for example, a feeling of hunger that signals how many energy resources they have — their chances of survival are almost as good as those of an animal that uses cognitive resources to calculate the best decision.

Although the idea of animal cognition may seem strange to some, it is a well-documented fact that is widely accepted by researchers, and the new study helps us gain a deeper insight into how animals solve problems.

Let's imagine an example to better understand the takeaways from the new study. Let's say an animal (a deer) is in a situation that involves several parameters such as what food is available and where, and whether there's a predator around. Let's say the deer wants to eat some nuts but there's a lion hiding in the bushes next to the desired nuts.

Information such as "what happened the last time when I tried to snatch away some nuts from right next to this lion" would be useful for helping the deer decide what's the best course of action, but integrating that kind of information would be costly from an evolutionary perspective.

As study co-author Prof. John McNamara, from the University of Bristol's School of Mathematics, says, "If it costs a lot of resources to be so clever, then natural selection will have found a cheaper way to make decisions."

And this cheaper way is having a simple, physiological form of "memory" that resides in our gut. "The ability to use internal states such as hunger as a memory will have reduced the need to evolve big brains," continues Prof. McNamara.

On being 'hangry' and trusting your gut

Here is Dr. Andrew Higginson, the study's lead author, explaining what the findings mean and what are their implications for humans.

"Many of us sometimes get 'hangry:' when hunger makes us emotional and changes our behavior. Our model explains why there is [a] link between our gut and our decisions: hunger can act as a memory telling us there's not been much food around, which it's important to respond to in the wild."

"The usefulness of such memory means that animals, including humans, may appear to be processing a great deal of information in the brain when in fact they are just following their gut."

Dr. Andrew Higginson

The researchers also speculate that emotions may have a similar role to hunger, in that memories may also be "encoded" in them, helping animals make quick, smart decisions, which are very useful in the wild.

In other words, the main takeaway of this study seems to be that there is such a thing as a gut instinct, and humans had better trust it. It might be a simple, quick, cost-effective way to make decisions that nature gifted us and our fellow animals with.

Plus, it has the advantage that it makes you appear smarter than you really are in front of your peers. If your colleagues ask you how you came up with that brilliant solution to a problem at work, you don't have to tell them you just went with your gut. You can always reach into your ever resourceful brain and pull out a useful post-rationalization.

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